After meetings in Vienna from June 25 to June 27, Austrian Foreign Minister Alois Mock and Hungarian Foreign Minister Gyula Horn drive to the border near the Hungarian city of Sopron and symbolically cut the barbed wires of the iron curtain in the afternoon of June 27.

It was Mock who suggested to stage this highly symbolic photo op between two neighbors cut apart by the iron curtain for 40 years. This encouraged East Germans to take their summer vacations in Hungary and try crossing the border.

The “Berlin Wall” has become the principal symbol of the East-West Cold War divide. Yet the first breach in the iron curtain surprisingly occurred along the Austro-Hungarian border. The new Hungarian Communist reform government of Miklos Nemeth entered office in late November 1988 and made crucial decisions. Ever since the mid-1980s border guards had warned the authorities in Budapest that the electronic border installations (“iron curtain”) were outdated. Hundreds of false alarms occurred every day.

It would be too expensive to modernize the 30-year technical barriers – they had lost their purpose when travel restrictions for Hungarians were gradually eased in the 1980s. In early May, the Hungarian government ordered the removal of the border installations.

On June 27, Foreign Ministers Alois Mock and Gyula Horn staged a high profile photo op cutting the iron curtain. This inspired thousands of East Germans to vacation in Hungary with the intention of crossing the border and migrate via Austria to West Germany.

CHRONOLOGY OF FIRST BREACHES IN THE IRON CURTAIN

FALL, 1987 First position papers by Hungarian border troops about the outdated and faulty electronic barriers on Western border.